You're completely off base here. The equivalent of suing Napster then would be suing Bram Cohen now, which isn't happening. (Yet.)
Instead of suing bittorrent users, the **AA should be focusing its efforts on the warez groups, and more importantly, suppliers.
And that still only works when you're in a controlled environment. I wouldn't try to stream movies from a laptop while driving through the city, this is no different.
You're overlooking the fact that the keylogger used was a hardware keylogger. The only setups that would prevent such a device are removing physical access, or constant monitoring. The person in charge of network security would have nothing to do with this.
You're completely off base here. The equivalent of suing Napster then would be suing Bram Cohen now, which isn't happening. (Yet.) Instead of suing bittorrent users, the **AA should be focusing its efforts on the warez groups, and more importantly, suppliers.
And that still only works when you're in a controlled environment. I wouldn't try to stream movies from a laptop while driving through the city, this is no different.
And are you aware of the fact that the PSP is a portable device, making streaming completely useless?
You're overlooking the fact that the keylogger used was a hardware keylogger. The only setups that would prevent such a device are removing physical access, or constant monitoring. The person in charge of network security would have nothing to do with this.